Grand Lake evades TABOR with new tax badly disguised as a fee
The town of Grand Lake recently imposed a new charge to enhance the town’s taxes. In doing so, it broke faith with its citizens.
Laws are how the government tells the
people how to behave (like, don’t drive 80 mph down a residential
street). A town’s charter or a state constitution is how the people tell
their government how to behave (like the town’s trustees must be
elected). In Colorado’s constitution, the Taxpayer’s Bill of Rights —
commonly known as TABOR — requires any government to obtain prior voter approval before it takes more taxes from individuals.
Grand Lake’s Trustees are no longer operating by the rules.
They expect you to conform to the laws but behave as if they can ignore the Colorado Constitution.
This, in spite of the fact that new
revenue is deposited to the General Fund to cover expenses that are
traditionally core functions of town governance, namely street lighting
and safety. The Trustees must follow the rule that if the charge raises
money for a public purpose and the charge is broadly based, it must be a
tax.
If a charge enhancing General Fund collections can truly be termed a fee, then what would constitute a tax?
The Trustees falsely maintain that they
can declare the charge is a fee, not a tax, as long as the “service is
roughly proportional to the cost.” But every government program has a
budget that can be apportioned to citizens as a “fee” in addition to the
normal taxes. Moreover, that phrase pertains to limiting the amount of a
fee; it doesn’t define a fee.
If the Grand Lake interpretation were to
prevail, there will be an intolerable precedent set throughout Colorado,
which is why this fiscal policy is gaining statewide concern.
The town has avoided the plain language of the Taxpayer’s Bill of Rights. Common sense tells us the charge is a tax. Grand Lake Trustees should reverse this unconstitutional ordinance and put any new tax to a vote at the next election.
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